The 800-year-old practice of handwritten exams may soon be scrapped off by UK's prestigious Cambridge University in favour of using laptops or iPads due to the deterioration in students' handwriting. Academicians said that a growing reliance on laptops has led to students' writing becoming increa

The 800-year-old practice of handwritten exams may soon be scrapped off by UK's prestigious Cambridge University in favour of using laptops or iPads due to the deterioration in students' handwriting. Academicians said that a growing reliance on laptops has led to students' writing becoming increasingly illegible.

Dr Sarah Pearsall, a senior lecturer at Cambridge's history faculty who was involved with the pilot earlier this year, said that handwriting is becoming a "lost art" among the current generation of students.

"Fifteen or twenty years ago students routinely have written by hand several hours a day -- but now they write virtually nothing by hand except exams," she added. A consultation has been launched by the Cambridge University on the topic as part of its "digital education strategy", having already piloted an exam typing scheme in the history and classics faculties earlier this year, The Telegraph reported.

Difficulty in reading scripts

"As a faculty, we have been concerned for years about the declining handwriting problem. There has definitely been a downward trend. It is difficult for both the students and the examiners as it is harder and harder to read these scripts," Sarah said.

Pearsall said that an increasing number of scripts are having to be transcribed centrally, meaning that students with illegible writing are forced to come back to their college during the summer holidays to read their answers aloud in the presence of two university administrators.

She said it is "extraordinarily commendable" that the university is considering reforms to its examination practices.

But it seems that not everyone favours this move. Some have voiced fears that the "handwritten word (could) become a matter of nostalgia." Tracey Trussell, a handwriting expert at the British Institute of Graphologists, urged Cambridge to "make sure that students continue to write by hand, particularly in lectures."

"Certainly with social media, iPads, and all the rest of it, people do clearly use keyboards much more than they would hand write. It's vital that people continue to write by hand," she added. There is also concern that schools could follow Cambridge's example by moving away from handwriting.